Climate emergency radio relay

“We have a climate emergency, but no one is reporting or acting on the facts. What are we going to do?,” asked The Sustainable Hour on 94.7 The Pulse in Geelong.

Inspired by American presidential candidate Bernie Sanders’ call for a World War II mobilisation, they started asking a row of Australian leaders this question. Their replies were not to look towards the politicians, but towards the people. Politicians will not lead with action until the public is aware, accepts the truth, and demands urgent action.

So The Sustainable Hour started asking: “Who will be able to be that ‘Climate-Churchill’ for Australia who is able to do what Churchill did at his time for the United Kingdom and its allies: uniting and mobilising everyone to take action against the threat.”

Welcome to The Churchillian Challenge – a radio relay

Rob Oakeshott

In The Sustainable Hour on 2 November 2016 we called the independent politician Rob Oakeshott. He suggested to engage the ‘Captains of Industry’, the business community, to be advocates for climate action. If we are able to reposition the perception of the business industry, you will find that there are many leaders who are ready to speak up about the climate emergency, Oakeshott suggested.

“Political leadership fails by ignoring Pacific Island neighbours who are moving schools, houses, and at times entire villages due to the emergency of climate change. This is happening right now. All at the indulgence of those stuck in a debate focused more on power and money than logic and evidence.”Rob Oakeshott

Simon Sheikh

In The Sustainable Hour on 7 September 2016 we called the former GetUp! leader, today CEO of Future Super, Simon Sheikh. He talked about the climate emergency petition as an incubator for initiatives such as a climate emergency fund and a coalition of climate emergency mobilisers.

“The point is not the petition in itself, it is who you connect with during the campaign.”Simon Sheikh

Carmen Lawrence

In The Sustainable Hour on 6 July 2016 we called the former premier of Western Australia, Carmen Lawrence. She stressed that in the absence of activity from governments nationally, locally and internationally, we are not likely to solve this problem.

“We are inherently egocentric, as a species, but if we focus on the health effects [of climate change] and draw them to people’s attention, then we may be getting better results than we are getting at the moment. One of the ways that we can get people to think about climate change as an emergency is to focus on the impact on human beings. We should focus on all those things that people really care about – themselves, their health, their family, their community – and try and draw out for them what will happen if they don’t act, and how things can be made better. Constructing the climate emergency in terms of its effect on human beings more than, in a sense, its effect on the ice flow in the Antarctic. These are things that are remote for many people’s experience, but they do understand the effects of the extreme weather events, for example, on communities. They do understand what happens when there is a draught and when there is competition for resources. So, let’s focus on those things and make sure people understand how potentially dire circumstances are, but equally, how much it is possible to act to change these things.”Carmen Lawrence

Christine Milne

In The Sustainable Hour on 15 June 2016 we called the former Greens senator Christine Milne. She said we need to depoliticise the climate emergency and recommended to focus at the community level.

“We are in an emergency, and I think that the more we can use that word the better. At the moment, to a lot of people, that seems like an extreme thing to say, but it is actually an acknowledgement of the physical reality.”Christine Milne

Peter Rae

In The Sustainable Hour on 4 May 2016 we called the former Liberal senator Peter Rae. He said we need an education program, but this requires the media to be able to inform people accurately what the facts are and what the solutions are. So he advised us to get the media involved.

“We’re being taken for fools by the political system. Politics is broken in this country. Money has stopped the real issues being addressed. This is not a left or right wing political issue. This is an existential issue. If we don’t get it right, we all have a very big problem. What we need is a Government of National Unity. The main environmental groups are not honest about the problem. The NGOs are as much a part of the failure as anybody else.”Ian Dunlop

Bernie Sanders

In The Sustainable Hour on 20 April 2016 we listened to the American presidential candidate Bernie Sanders talk about the climate emergency in front of CNN’s tv-cameras and a cheering audience. Never before heard: a politician in an election campaign speaking out like that?!

“We have a global crisis. Pope Francis reminded us that we are on a suicide course. … This is a difference between understanding that we have a crisis of historical consequence here, and incrementalism and those little steps are not enough. Not right now. Not on climate change.”Bernie Sanders

David Spratt

In The Sustainable Hour on 94.7 The Pulse on 23 March 2016, we interviewed author David Spratt about his new paper about the climate emergency, titled ‘Climate Reality Check’.

“The unprecedented rate of global warming is melting the polar ice caps, raising sea levels and undermining food and water security for many of the world’s peoples. Action has been too slow, because economics has trumped physics. Now emergency action is the only rational response.”David Spratt